Tag Archives: Holy Spirit

January 14, 2024 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

JOY Fellowship Worship Service in Holland Hall: 9:00 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 9:00 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Worship service streams live at 10:30 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Worship Services for January 21, 2024. Today we discover that Salvation and a full life in Christ are seen in personal and social holiness..

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

Ultimate Reality

Read Ephesians 6:10-18

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“We use God’s mighty weapons, not worldly weapons, to knock down the strongholds of human reasoning and to destroy false arguments. We destroy every proud obstacle that keeps people from knowing God. We capture their rebellious thoughts and teach them to obey Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:4-5 NLT).

Have you ever heard of the novel Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by author Seth Grahame Smith? If not, you may have at least remembered the film of the same name based off of the same novel. It is a story that takes well-known facts about Abraham Lincoln, facts such as the loss of his mother due to ilness at an early age, growing up in poverty, learning to read and write himself, becoming a lawyer, then a politician, then president, etc., and weaved them into an alternate reality where vampires exist and Abraham Lincoln, despite what we think we know about him, is actually a vampire hunter.

In this reality, it was vampires who caused his mom to die, it was vampires who were funding the South and feeding off of its slaves. In fact, it was that very fact that was causing freed slaves to be brought back down South, to feed the vampires on the blood of those not even the Northerners would truly care about. In this alternate reality, Lincoln vows to kill the one who killed his mom and he takes up with a rather unlikely mentor to learn how to wield his axe against more than just trees and firewood.

The whole history of Abraham Lincoln is thus seen through this lense of a world infiltrated by vampires, evil spirits that look to divide and conquer an entire nation. Of course, for a time Lincoln hangs up his axes, so-to-speak, to run for and lead the U.S of A. as President as a way of defeating the South (and thus the Vampires) through legislation; however, that quickly leads to a Civil War that the country is doomed to lose unless Lincoln embraces his Hunter past and starts to fight the enemy on its own terms.

That’s more than enough context to begin to make a point that struck me as I was thinking of this story. In fact, I rewatched the film recently to make sure I was not off point in my memory. Still, this story would seem on the surface to be a retelling of history as we know it. It would appear to present, in fact, an alternate history, one that is more based in terrifying fantasy than reality. I mean, we all know Abraham Lincoln’s history. We know the history of racism in our country, and we need not conjure up vampires to pin evil down on the segments of humanity that perpetuate it.

With that said, in some ways, I argue that our version of history is actually dead wrong, pardon the pun, and this “alternate” history is actually more real than we realize. Now, of course, I am not suggesting that Abraham Lincoln was actually a VAMPIRE HUNTER nor that vampires in the physically undead sense are actually real, however, I am suggesting that evil forces have always been at work behind the scenes. That was no different in Lincoln’s day and it is certainly no different now. Lincoln on many levels understood this and the burden that he carried as a result was very visible. He was a broken man leading a broken nation toward some semblance of unity and righteousness. An impossible task on so many levels and yet, it was the task he undertook.

Our history as we present it only paints a very limited portrait. We in the modern world are so quick to dismiss things of the spiritual realm. Even we in the church try to dismiss things that might get us Christians preceived as “out there” or “fanatics” or “crazy”. Think about it, there is nothing we can do to stop people from thinking those things anyway.

Let’s be honest, we worship a God who shed divinity, took on a male human identity, got crucified and died. That same God rose again from the dead, ascended into heaven (a place we can’t see, touch, taste, hear, or smell…let alone sense), and sits at the right hand side of, wait for it, the Father-personality of himself…and that guy, that Jesus, will come back and judge all creation (alive and dead alike). If that doesn’t sound crazy, nothing will to the average person. But to us who KNOW IT TO BE TRUE, it is ULTIMATE REALITY. What’s more, we also know that there are evil forces, demons if you will, that exist in the Spiritual realm…that we are at war with dark forces and, truthfully, we are either the hunters or the possessed when it comes to those forces.

By hunter, I don’t mean one wields an axe or any weapon other than one’s faith in Jesus Christ. We do so through reading Scripture, through prayer, through fasting, through Holy Communion, through worship and attending to all of the ordinances of God. When we participate in the life of the Holy Spirit, we are filled with a life that wages war against the spirits and principalities in this world. That war has been going since the beginning of humanity’s fall and Christ will finally return and put sin, death, and evil to an ultimate end.

So, while we know that stories such as vampire stories are fictitious on one level, they do point to a truth on a deeper and more spiritual level. Out in the world, out the hostile and cruel world, there are forces at work beyond our imagining and, truth be told, vampires do exist everywhere. Anyone or anything that lives off of you by sucking the lifeforce out of you spiritually, emotionally, or psychologically is a vampire. We don’t respond to those dark influences judgmentally, but by prayerfully and Spiritually handing them over to Christ.

Jesus Christ, as in the fictitious stories, is the antidote evil in whatever forms it presents itself and we, his heavenly ambassadors, have the power and the obligation to resist such evil at all costs. Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ, understood this. The Apostles, the earliest church Fathers and Mothers, the aesthetics and mystics, as well as saints such as Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Rev. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. all understood this and paid with their lives in one form or another. Friends, let us also understand this wisdom and allow Christ to prepare us for the spiritual war that is raging.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
We wage battle not with swords or spears, guns or tanks; rather with the Word of God, Jesus Christ, through our presence with and loving service to those the world shuns, the outcast, the needy and the least of these.

PRAYER
Lord, help me lead others to where they otherwise might not see. Help me to be a sign of your love, presence and grace to all I come in contact with. Amen.

Dance, Baby, Dance

Read 2 Samuel 6:14-22

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
You have turned my mourning into joyful dancing. You have taken away my clothes of mourning and clothed me with joy, that I might sing praises to you and not be silent. O Lord my God, I will give you thanks forever!

Do you like to dance? I absolutely love to. It is not that I have taken any lessons. I think I took some tap dance lessons when I was a kid, but the only tapping I remember is what I am doing now, on the keyboard. Still, I love to dance. Bring me to a club, take me to concert, bring me to a wedding, and I will inevitably dance it up no matter how I look. I just love to move my body. Besides, is head banging any different really? I love to do both.

Every now and again, including recently, I put together a mix of music to dance. The past two have been centered on darker dance songs. What do I mean by “darker”? That is a great question, for I feel the word “dark” gets used for so many different things that it is important to define. By dark, I mean that the music focuses on deeper, more substantive subjects that relate to the struggles of being human.

These songs can and do dive into different facets of humanity, from depression to anxiety, from loneliness to sexuality. All of these songs are relatable to human life and the struggle it is to be human. Have you ever noticed that. We cling to our lives like precious gems, and they are precious gems; yet, the cost of that is the daily struggle of survival. For some of us that is easier than others, but it is a struggle all the same.

Ask yourself this: “Have I gone through life without a single struggle?” Chances are, you haven’t gone through life unscathed at all. We all have our troubles, our trials, our doubts, our fears, our insecurities. Truthfully, not even Jesus Christ went through life without all of those struggles; therefore, how can any of us expect to do so.

As such, one of the things I have learned to do is to dance through the pain. First, it is hard to feel depressed and troubled when you are moving your body joyously. When I listen to the darker songs, they are expressing my pain lyrically, but the music is carrying me through it, transcending it through exuberant, joyful, and counter-emotional movements. Now, I am able to dance physically and so I do, but dancing need not be merely a physical activity; rather, it can be a spiritual and emotional one too. Put on your favorite music, sing out loud, scream the songs out if you have to. Dance within your heart, your soul, your entire being.

Friends, there is plenty in this world to cause us to want to stop dancing; however, that is when we truly stop living. God created us to dance, to joyfully worship God and to live freely into who we are as God’s children. Whatever your dance is, whatever music it is that makes you want to move, put that on and show the world that it is going to take more than struggles to keep you from rocking and rolling.

If we do that, there will be no telling what God will do with us. Just look at King David who danced, even despite the scorn of his wife, with all his might before the Lord our God. We can do the same too, and we can do so inspite of all that the world throws our way. Sisters and brothers, let us throw off our burdens before the Lord and dance them away, allowing the Lord to fill us with eternal and everlasting joy, a joy the world can never take away.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Not today, Satan! Today I dance!

PRAYER
Lord, teach and help me to dance. Amen.

January 14, 2024 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

JOY Fellowship Worship Service in Holland Hall: 9:00 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 9:00 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Worship service streams live at 10:30 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Worship Services for January 14, 2024. Today we discover that Grace is a gift from God given freely to all people, and because of this gift we are saved.

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

January 7, 2024 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

Combined Livestream Worship Service in Holland Hall: 10:30 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 10:30 a.m. EST (-500 GMT). There will be no in-person worship this Sunday due to inclement winter weather.

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Worship Service for January 7, 2024. Today we discover that Holy Baptism is God’s cleansing of our original sin, initiation into Christ’s Holy Church, incorporation into the body of Christ, and empowerment by the Holy Spirit for a lifelong process of discipleship in community.

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

December 31, 2023 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

Combined Worship Service in the Main Sanctuary: 10:30 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 9:00 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Combined Worship Service for December31, 2023. Today we prepare for a fresh start with hope.

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

December 24, 2024 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

Combined Christmas Eve Service in the Main Sanctuary: 10:30 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 9:00 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Christmas Eve Candlelight and Carols Service in the Main Sanctuary: 7:00 p.m.

Worship service streams live at 10:30 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Worship Services for December 24, 2023. Today we discover that God invites us to face the unknown with courage, like Mary did, and that as we go, Emmanuel! God, is with us.

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

REVISITED: Why Advent?

Read Isaiah 11:1-9

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“I heard a loud shout from the throne, saying, “Look, God’s home is now among His people! He will live with them, and they will be His people. God Himself will be with them.” (Revelation 21:3 NLT)

Advent2

Advent is one of my favorite times of year. It is true that I am not a big fan of winter or its weather, I really love the season of Advent and of the great hope that it stands for. Throughout the majority of Christian history, the church has in one way or another celebrated the coming Christ. With that said, Christmas (aka the coming of the Christ-child) was not always celebrated by the church. In fact, it was quite a controversy early on and, in some Christian circles, it is still a controversy.

The  church didn’t officially recognize the “feast day” of Christ’s birth (what became known as Christ’s Mass or Christmas) until the fourth century, and when we look at the Gospels themselves, only two of the four canonical Gospels (Matthew and Luke) actually account for the birth of the Christ-child. The other two canonical Gospels (Mark and John) do not mention the birth of Christ at all. Mark starts off with Jesus’ baptism and John merely makes mention that the WORD of God manifested itself in the flesh as Jesus (John 1:14). They clearly did not feel that there was any significant reason to include the story of the Nativity in their Gospels.

So, then, why Advent? Regardless of the fact that only two of the four Gospels include the Nativity story, each of the four Gospels have the Advent story! In fact, the entire Bible is an Advent story. Advent, of course, means “the arrival of a notable person, thing, or event”. All of Scripture is pointing to Advent, when you really think about it. All of Scripture is pointing to the advent or arrival of Immanuel, of “God with us.” From the first humans through the Exodus, from the age of the kings through the prophets, from the exile through Roman occupation, from the birth of Jesus through his resurrection, from the apostles through our the age in which we find ourselves, this world is SCREAMING for the advent of God’s Kingdom, the advent of hope, healing, wholeness, justice, mercy, compassion and grace!

Why Advent? Because we live in a broken world filled with broken people such as ourselves. Why Advent? Because we live in a world filled with social injustice. Why Advent? Because we live in a world where people pour lighter fluid down the throats of teenagers and light them on fire. Why Advent? Because we live in a world where a few have everything, and a majority people have nothing. Why Advent? Because we all play our part in the reality of sin. Why Advent? Because we desire justice, we long for mercy, strive to live humbly.

Unfortunately, in the longing for Advent, we often miss a hugely important point. Immanuel has already come. GOD IS WITH US! GOD IS WITHIN US! While we certainly await the coming of God’s Kingdom in all of its fullness, and while the Bible is all about advent, it also points us to the reality of God’s presence with us, God’s love for us, and God’s holy spirit within us. The question really isn’t why Advent? Rather, the question should be why wait?

What are we waiting for? God desires that we see God’s presence with us now. We no longer have to lie in wait. We no longer have to sit and hope for some savior to come and rescue us. That savior has already come, that savior has never left, and that savior has no intention of leaving. So long as there are people who open themselves up to God, the Savior will always be present in the world. Jesus didn’t call us to wait, but to BE AWAKE. Jesus didn’t call us into waiting…but he sent his disciples and he sends us into action. Instead of waiting, actively take part in showing the world that GOD is already here…that GOD IS ALREADY WITH US…THAT LOVE WINS.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
How are you bringing the reality of Immanuel into the world around you?

PRAYER
Lord, I am your vessel of hope, healing and wholeness. Use me as a witness to your presence among all people. Amen.

December 17, 2023 – Newton UMC – Sunday Worship Livestream

JOY Fellowship Worship Service in Holland Hall: 9:00 a.m.

Worship service streams live at 9:00 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Worship service streams live at 10:30 a.m. EST (-500 GMT)

Welcome to our live-streamed Sunday Worship Services for December 17, 2023. Today we discover that to testify is to tell how our story is part of God’s story.

Please support us by giving online: https://tithe.ly/give?c=1377216 or https://paypal.me/newtonumc Or you can make and mail a check out to First UMC of Newton, 111 Ryerson Ave., Newton, NJ O7860

God bless you all for your generosity which is vital to our mission and ministry.

REVISITED: O Come, O Come Emmanuel

Read Matthew 1:18-23

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE

“Then Isaiah said: ‘Hear then, O house of David! Is it too little for you to weary mortals, that you weary my God also? Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Look, the young woman is with child and shall bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel.’” (Isaiah 7:13-14)

VeniVeniEmmanuelIt is hard to put into words the fear, anxiety, sadness, depression and confusion that ran through most people’s minds at the close of this past Friday, December 14. By the end of the day we had learned, following spending the day watching the drama unfold on live TV, that 28 people had been shot and killed at an elementary school in Connecticut. Out of the 28, twenty of them were children between the ages of six and seven years old.

Often times, in tragedies such as this, people ask the question, “Where is God in all of this?”  After all, what kind of God would allow children to be born and grow up in a world that is seemingly as evil as this one is?  What kind of God would create “monsters” who go out and destroy those who are innocent?  What kind of God would be so cold as to not intervene when the lives of the innocent are at stake?

These are all valid and good questions to ask ourselves.  It is also safe to say that there really aren’t any answers that fully satisfy our need to understand how evil and God co-exist? I could offer a ton of Christianese clichés that sound good off the cuff, but that would only be to simplify something that is very complex; so, rather than offering easy answers to really tough questions, I will provide one of many possible ways in which we can reflect on what happened and what our response will be.

It is very easy for us to look at where we don’t see God only to miss out on where we are seeing God.  For instance, we look at Adam Lanza and see his actions as a prime example of God failing to be with us. Yet, we also fail to see that God was with the principal who lunged at Adam and was the first to be shot and killed. God was with the teachers as they did everything they could, including cover children with their own bodies, to save their students.  God was with the first responders.  God is also with those who are looking at ways to address the societal issues that end up allowing people like Adam to fall through the cracks unnoticed until it is too late. When Jesus called his disciples to care for “the least of these”, that included those who suffer from mental illness. Yet, in our society, mental illness is stigmatized and our health care system often doesn’t provide affordable ways for people suffering from mental illness to get the kind of care (not just drugs and a locked asylum door) that they need.

The fact of the matter is that bad things do happen. People have free will and choose to do all sorts of things that God would not wish for anyone to choose. But aside from that fact, we still have a God who loves us, a God who is with us, a God who provides hope even in the darkest of circumstances.  The Nativity story is a reminder of the hope of Emmanuel, or rather, the hope of God being with us. This God came to earth and became one of us; this God put others first and sought to be present with all people, regardless of their status or condition. This God was crucified by God’s own creation and resurrected back to life despite being put to death.  This God is the same God who was present with the teachers, administrators and first responders who worked desperately hard to save as many as possible, risking their own lives in the process. This God is the same God who is turning the media’s attention from labeling Adam as “the face of evil”, to looking at how people like Adam haven’t received the care they need.

While we cannot definitively answer the question of why bad things like this happen, aside from the obvious answers, we certainly can still have the hope of Emmanuel. Let us not forget that God never leaves us, nor forsakes us.  We can know that God is with us, and we can let God guide us to be instrumental in sparking the changes that are needed in the communities around us, the very changes that could protect other children and people from such acts of evil. Let us welcome Emmanuel in this world, by seeing God’s revelation in us.  We have been equipped to be the presence of God in the lives of those in need, whether they are children in distress or Adam Lanza’s slipping through the cracks. Let us be like the writer of Hebrews who with confidence proclaims, “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid” (Hebrews 13:6).

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
We need not look any further than our own hearts, and the hearts of those around us, to find God.

PRAYER
Lord, I thank you for always being present with me, and thank you for revealing your presence in me. Let me witness to that Good News! Amen.

Originally written on December 19, 2012